
When visiting the Museum if you descend below sea level to discover the Tidal Zone, you’ll find an underwater view of Falmouth Harbour at high tide. This Autumn you’ll also find two powerful installations in the Tidal Zone that confront the issue of marine plastic pollution and its impact on our oceans and coastal communities.

‘Whale in the Room’ is a striking installation featuring 380 kilograms of marine debris retrieved from Cornish waters by Clean Ocean Sailing. This suspended sculpture represents the amount of plastic waste entering our oceans every single second, equating to 12 million tonnes annually.
Originally commissioned by Newlyn Art Gallery & The Exchange for the Storm Warning exhibition in 2024, this work brings urgent environmental concerns into dialogue with its unique coastal setting in our Tidal Zone.
About the Artist: Andre Kong is an award-winning architect and artist whose practice focuses on creating structures using reclaimed materials. Clean Ocean Sailing, based in Gweek, Cornwall, use restored sailing vessels to collect waste from coastal areas around Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly.

This installation is part of a remarkable chain created from over 65,000 bottle tops collected by volunteers from Cornish beaches, the original chain stretched over one kilometre long. With over 35 million plastic bottles thrown away daily in the UK, and only a minority recycled, this installation highlights the scale of unnecessary waste.
Acknowledgments: Created by Claire Wallerstein with thanks to beach cleaning groups across Cornwall who remove hundreds of tonnes of harmful marine litter from our coasts annually, and to Jed and Ann Lewis, Rame Peninsula Beach Care, for installation support.
National Maritime
Museum Cornwall Trust
Discovery Quay
Falmouth Cornwall
TR11 3QY
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